Pages

Thursday, July 12, 2012

It came in a small box containing the unit and a minimal sheet with instructions. "Use common sense" and "Do not immerse the product in any type of liquid" were the most interesting guidelines, but also there was a link to a driver download page.

On the driver download page you could register for software updates, there was a FAQ section, a quick guide and a datasheet; informative, simple and to the point.

The drivers are available in a version for all users of the computer which requires administrative rights to install, and a user version which installs the software locally under your user profile folder.

The installation was straightforward, but to many "nexts" I think: Next, I agree, Next, Next, Next, Next, Finish. Then the light started to shine in green. The light can show 5 colors: dark red (Do Not Disturb), red (Busy), yellow (Away/Off Work), green (Available) and blue flashing (Incoming call) but the difference between red and dark red is probably too small to be visible to anyone walking up to your desk. At an incoming call the light will play a ringtone and there are 8 different tones to choose from, and you can even set the volume of it. The driver installs a tray application where you can control the tone and volume.

So far I really like this little product and I think it can be really useful when sitting in an open office environment with a headset glued to your skull. The Microsoft Lync team tweeted about busylight with this post: "15% of employees cite distraction by colleagues as a drain on productivity" and pointed to busylight as a solution, I second that.

Tuesday, July 10, 2012

TechED 2012 in Orlando was the first TechED I attended,
all-in-all a great event! Well organized, and really great to meet with all
these people. Someone said that techED is about the people - the community -
and I agree.

The event started out with a keynote session, it was so-so,
not that the speaker did not do a good job, but there was really not that much new
to get excited about. Windows 8 and Server 2012 looks good, but since most
people in attendance had already seen these products it was not too exciting to see
the switching between metro style and old-school windows. A new Hypervisor and
SQL server looks nice, delivering a million IOPS. Clearly Lync were not the
focus of techED this year, but I was a bit disappointed that they hardly
mentioned Lync in the keynotes. There were a couple of really good sessions on
Lync and many good speakers present.

The place we were in was really good, ample space for
everyone. There were a big exhibitors section were a lot of companies talked
about their products and gave away t-shirts and stuff. From a Lync perspective
it was nice to meet with Jabra, Plantronics, Snom, HP, NET Technologies and
Audiocodes among many others. I was helping out in the Hands-on-labs area where
we had around 500 workstations set up and some 140 different labs that the
attendees could play around with. You can still try the labs here for some time.

Some were really comfortable in our little lab area

I also joined the "Twitter army" which was a bunch
of people tweeting from the event and a jury gave away some stuff for different
categories of tweets and twitters. I really enjoyed that and I think it was a
good way to follow the event online even though I was there. (Follow me,
@mkressmark)

We also did have a lot of fun at the event; there was a
garden sized chess table in the games area which was nice. There were a
delegate party at the convention center and another one at Universal studios,
and there were numerous other side events, meetings and parties you could
attend.

The coolest giveaway of TechED 2012!

I have to thank Specops / Knowledge Factory for a great
"Swedish" party, nice to meet a few of the approximately 150 swedes
that came to TechED i North America. Unfortunately, I got to see two terrible
soccer games from a pub in Orlando, first Sweden lost to Ukraine and then to
England and were out of the Euro2012 :-(

Walking a dog at Universal studios

TechED in Amsterdam followed the agenda of TechED in Orlando
pretty closely. The keynotes were pretty much the same, many of the sessions
had other speakers but the material was mainly the same with a few good
exceptions. We all know everything in America is big, and everything in
Amsterdam were a bit smaller, smaller convention center, exhibitors area, hands
on lab area, twitter army, people, etc. However, I think I met with even more
good people in Amsterdam, plenty of Swedes and Europeans. The parties were also
really nice. Microsoft arranged a soccer viewing at the Amsterdam Arena (video here), and Microsoft Sweden also arranged a soccer night were we saw Italy
defeat Germany.

The boxing bots and hands-on-lab area in Amsterdam RAI

All in all I had a great June this year, and I will try to
attend TechED in New Orleans next year, hope to meet you there!